Canada Sends Warship Through Taiwan Strait And China Takes Notice

Passages in sensitive waters near the mainland usually anger Beijing.

ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty ImagesThe HMCS Ottawa is seen here in a strait near Singapore on May 15, 2017. The federal government says the warship sailed through the Taiwan Strait this week.

OTTAWA ⁠— Canada has sailed a warship through the sensitive Taiwan Strait, the federal government said, three months after a similar operation and amid strained ties between Beijing and Ottawa.

Such passages typically upset China, which claims democratic and self-ruled Taiwan as part of Chinese territory.

In April, Beijing condemned a French decision to send a frigate through the strait as illegal, and China has also been upset by U.S. navy ships passing through the same waterway.

We hope the Canadian side takes practical actions to show that it respects China’s sovereignty and security.Hua Chunying, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman

The federal government said the frigate HMCS Ottawa passed through the Taiwan Strait on Monday and Tuesday.

“This route was chosen as it was the most direct route between UN Security Council sanctions monitoring activities in Northeast Asia and engagements in Southeast Asia,” the Department of National Defence said on Tuesday.

“The Royal Canadian Navy does not conduct so-called Freedom of Navigation operations aimed at challenging the territorial claims of other nations, and the ship’s transit was conducted in accordance with international law, including the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.”

Watch: The U.S. navy sailed through the Taiwan Strait in May. Story continues below.

In June, two Canadian ships also sailed through the narrow strait that separates Taiwan from China, but denied that Canada was trying to make any kind of political point.

Taiwan’s Defence Ministry said the latest ship passed through the strait in a southerly direction and was monitored throughout by Taiwan’s armed forces.

In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said that China did not take exception to the “normal passage” through the Taiwan Strait by foreign warships.

“But I don’t know what special purpose the Canadian side had in taking pains to make such a high-profile announcement about this,” she told a daily news briefing on Wednesday.

“We hope the Canadian side takes practical actions to show that it respects China’s sovereignty and security.”

China, furious that Canadian police arrested a senior Huawei Technologies executive on Dec. 1 on a U.S. warrant, has blocked imports of meat products and canola seed from Canada and charged two Canadian men with spying.

However both countries have recently appointed new ambassadors to each other’s capitals, in a sign ties may be thawing.